Automotive Troops

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The Automobile Troops are troops in the Armed Forces of several former Soviet states, which transport personnel, deliver ammunition, fuel, food and other military materiel. They also evacuate wounded and sick personnel, and move weapons and military equipment.

Vehicle troops can transport troops that do not have their own vehicles. They consist of automobile (vehicle) units, and units, included in combined arms units and formations, as well as separate units and formations, sometimes constituting separate automobile units. They are called transport troops in some states.

Two of the most important such bodies are the Automotive Troops of the Russian Federation and the Belarusian Transport Troops.

Automotive Troops schools in the Soviet Union

Source:[1]

  • Ussuriysk Higher Military Automotive Command School (ru:Уссурийское высшее военное автомобильное командное училище). The school was disbanded in June 2007, and replaced by a centre for the training of automotive service specialists, in turned disbanded 2012.[2] After that the 70th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade (from 2018, 114th Guards MRR / 127th Motor Rifle Division) took over the site.
  • Ryazan' Higher Military Automotive Engineering School
  • Chelyabinsk Higher Military Automotive Engineering School
  • Samarkand Higher Military Automobile Command School

See also

  • 147th Automobile Base, Moscow, under the Ministry of Defence

Notes

  1. ^ Christina F. Shelton, "The Soviet Military Education System for Commissioning and Training Officers"] a bibliographical description and a link to the document in PDF format.
  2. ^ "Надпись "УВВАКУ" заменили на имя 70 мотострелковой бригады в Уссурийске" [The inscription "UVVAKU" was replaced with the name of the 70 Motor Rifle Brigade in Ussuriysk]. ussur.net (in Russian). Retrieved 2016-03-19.

References

  • Automotive Troops (originally Library of Congress Country Studies)
  • Военный энциклопедический словарь (ВЭС), Moscow, Военное издательство (ВИ), 1984, 863 стр. с иллюстрациями (ил.), 30 листов (ил.);
  • Большая советская энциклопедия (БСЭ), Третье издание, выпущенной издательством «Советская энциклопедия» в 1969—1978 годах в 30 томах;
  • Под редакцией: В. А. Золотарева, В. В. Марущенко, С. С. Автюшина. (1999). "Во Имя России: Российское государство, армия и воинское воспитание" / учебное пособие по общественно-государственной подготовке (ОГП) для офицеров и прапорщиков Вооружённых Сил Российской Федерации. Moscow: «Русь-РКБ». pp. 336 + вкл. ISBN 5-86273-020-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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  • Encyclopedia of Modern Ukraine